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The American Society for Aesthetics Board of Trustees has approved a $2,000 grant in partial support of the Dance Philosophy and Aesthetics events at the International Dance Studies Association annual meeting, to be held at Rutgers University, New Brunswick,
NJ October 14-17, 2021. ASA funds are providing partial support for travel and lodging for representatives of A14Africa, an internationally-renowned arts, philosophy and STEM fields organization.
REGISTRATION for the
DSA Conference and the Workshop
ASA Members: A limited number of registration fee waivers is available to ASA members for the Workshop October 14. Please contact secretary-treasurer@aesthetics-online.org if you are interested.
The ASA grant also is supporting four scholarships to attend the pre-conference workshop on Thursday, October 14 with A14Africa.
Tashara Gavin-Moorehead, MFA in Dance (2021) California State University-Long Beach, USA Ms. Gavin Moorehead is a professional dancer, choreographer and educator, based on Los Angeles. She is currently researching the relationship
between Nguzo Saba, the seven principles of Kwanzaa, and improvisation as a liberation practice. Audrey Lane Ellis, PhD in Philosophy (2021) State University of New York-Stony Brook, USA
Dr. Ellis is a philosopher and dance
critic trained in the traditions of phenomenology, ethics and aesthetics, in addition to women’s gender and sexuality studies. Her research focuses on contemporary philosophies of embodied knowledge and corporeal ethics, with an emphasis on how
these theories are materialized in dance and improvisational practices.
Sanchita Sharma, PhD in Culture and Performance student Department of World Arts and Cultures/Dance, University of California-Los Angeles, USA
Ms. Sharma
is a dance artist, filmmaker, and scholar based on Los Angeles. Her research explores the role of somatics and touch in Indian contemporary dance, especially how material and cultural situations shape perception, corporeality and choreographic
prac-tice.
Alma Gabriela Aguilar Rosales, PhD in Philosophy student Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México City, México
Ms. Aguilar Rosales is a philosophy and aesthetics student with a focus on dance, with an emphasis
on choreography and improvisation, stereotypes and cultural policies, and the mind-body problem. She has studied the Day of the Dead in México as well as the Mexican-African practice titled La Danza de los Diablos in the region located between
Oaxaca and Chiapas.
The project is directed by Jeff Friedman, Associate Professor of Dance Studies, Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University.
For more information, please contact Jeff Friedman: jfdance@mgsa.rutgers.edu
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